Thursday, May 30, 2013

21 Tips To Pleasing the Casting Director

I found this piece at Backstage.com Didn't change a word.

Casting directors are your advocates and your champions.
Your work reflects on us. Your wonderful work makes us look good and
gets that role cast. Your disconnected, tentative, muddled work does
nothing for anyone. We need you to be great. We’re here to host your
experience and shepherd you in, not hold you back. We want to share in
your excellent work.

Casting directors await you on the other side of that door – the door
that you can seen as a gateway or a barricade. While you turn it into a
horror movie, it’s your stage, not a torture chamber. Whether it’s a
pre-read for an associate or a full-blown director/producer callback
session, this is your time, your experience. This is your opportunity to
do exceptional work. Enter the space and do the work for yourself, for
the gratification of the work itself, and yes, to collaborate with the
other creative people waiting to figure it out with you. They can’t do
it without you.

Here are some choices (and they are choices) to make any casting director truly happy in the room.

1. Accept the invitation with grace and enthusiasm. You were requested to be here as our guest.
2. Come to work and not to please or get our approval.
3. Enter with certainty. Don’t give up your power as soon as the door opens.
4. Play on a level playing field. We’re all figuring it out. Together.
5. Make no excuses whatsoever. Leave your baggage outside. Better yet, at home.
6. Make the room your own. It will make us so much more comfortable.
7. Ask questions only when you truly need answers. “Do you have any
questions?” is usually another way of saying: “Are you ready?” You
aren’t required to have one.
8. Know your words and understand what you’re talking about. You
don’t have to be totally off-book, but if you’ve spent quality time with
the material, you’re going to know it.
9. Do your homework on the project. This includes knowing all the
players and the show or film’s tone and style. Read all the material you
can get your hands on.
10. Make choices and take responsibility for the choices you make.
11. Don’t apologize. Ever. For anything.
12. Know what you want to do and do it. Then leave yourself available
to make discoveries. Know that your homework is done. Now let your
preparation meet the moments.
13. Don’t mime or busy yourself with props, activity, or blocking. Keep it simple.
14. Don’t expect to be directed, but if you are, take the direction,
no matter what it is. Understand how to translate results-oriented
direction into action.
15. Don’t blame the reader. Make the reader the star of your
audition. According to my teaching partner Steve Braun, you should
engage fully no matter who’s reading those lines. Likely your reader
will engage – at least somewhat – if you show up.
16. Make specific, personal, bold choices. We want your unique voice to bring the script to life.
17. Stillness is powerful. Understand how to move and work in front
of the camera – eliminate running in and out and getting up and down.
18. Require no stroking, coddling, or love. We’re there to work.
Don’t take it personally when we’re not touchy-feely. Know that we love
actors and that’s truly why we’re here.
19. Understand that you’re there to collaborate. You’re being
evaluated in terms of how you serve the role and the material. It's not a
verdict on your personhood. Judgment is something you can control.
20. What you bring in reflects how you’re received so bring in joy, conviction, and ease, and our hearts will open.
21. Share your artistry above all else.
Remember that we’re all human in those rooms, and you can affect us
on an emotional level. It’s what we all really want. That’s your job.
You being fully present, truthful, personal, and vulnerable is going to
give us the ammunition we need to champion you with all our hearts. We
all desperately want you to do great work. We’re rooting for that every
time you walk into the room. You show up and do your fullest, deepest
work, and we’ll slay dragons for you and follow you anywhere. And man,
we’ll be so happy doing it. You have the power to make that happen. For
you. For us. For the work. Hallelujah!

Contact Us

Classes take place at:
New York Acting School for Film and Television
150 West 46 St, 7th floor, bet 6th and 7th Ave
Studio 150
New York, NY 10036
(212) 877-2219
Cell: (917) 797-2577
Email: stolzfun@earthlink.net

Our offices are at:
New York Acting School for Film and Television
2440 Broadway
Suite 275
(212) 877-2219
Cell: (917) 797-2577

Follow Us

Most Recent Posts

The New York Acting School for Film and Television can help you to give your best at every acting audition. This is an acting school that teaches, not just how to act, but how to act for the film and TV camera.